Authors
Federico Magnani, Maurizio Mencuccini, Marco Borghetti, Paul Berbigier, Frank Berninger, Sylvain Delzon, Achim Grelle, Pertti Hari, Paul G Jarvis, Pasi Kolari, Andrew S Kowalski, Harry Lankreijer, Beverly E Law, Anders Lindroth, Denis Loustau, Giovanni Manca, John B Moncrieff, Mark Rayment, Vanessa Tedeschi, Riccardo Valentini, John Grace
Publication date
2007/6/14
Journal
Nature
Volume
447
Issue
7146
Pages
849-851
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Temperate and boreal forests in the Northern Hemisphere cover an area of about 2 × 107 square kilometres and act as a substantial carbon sink (0.6–0.7 petagrams of carbon per year). Although forest expansion following agricultural abandonment is certainly responsible for an important fraction of this carbon sink activity, the additional effects on the carbon balance of established forests of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide, increasing temperatures, changes in management practices and nitrogen deposition are difficult to disentangle, despite an extensive network of measurement stations,. The relevance of this measurement effort has also been questioned, because spot measurements fail to take into account the role of disturbances, either natural (fire, pests, windstorms) or anthropogenic (forest harvesting). Here we show that the temporal dynamics following stand-replacing disturbances do indeed …
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